<?php
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 	ID:						$Id: 403.php 143 2013-09-22 07:51:06Z phone.mueller@googlemail.com $
* 	Letzter Stand:			$Revision: 143 $
* 	zuletzt geaendert von:	$Author: siekiera $
* 	Datum:					$Date: 2013-09-22 07:51:06 +0000 (Sun, 22 Sep 2013) $
*
* 	SEO:mercari by Siekiera Media
* 	http://www.seo-mercari.de
*
* 	Copyright (c) since 2011 SEO:mercari
* --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 	based on:
* 	(c) 2000-2001 The Exchange Project  (earlier name of osCommerce)
* 	(c) 2002-2003 osCommerce - www.oscommerce.com
* 	(c) 2003     nextcommerce - www.nextcommerce.org
* 	(c) 2005     xt:Commerce - www.xt-commerce.com
*
* 	Released under the GNU General Public License
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */

header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"].' 403 Forbidden');
header('Error 403: Forbidden');
header('Content-type: text/html');
?>
<html>
	<head>
		<title>403 Forbidden</title>
	</head>
	<body>
		<h1>Forbidden</h1>
		<p>You do not have permission to access this document.</p><hr />
		<address>
			Web Server at <?php echo $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME']; ?>
		</address>
	</body>
</html>
<!--
   - Unfortunately, Microsoft has added a clever new
   - "feature" to Internet Explorer. If the text of
   - an error's message is "too small", specifically
   - less than 512 bytes, Internet Explorer returns
   - its own error message. You can turn that off,
   - but it's pretty tricky to find switch called
   - "smart error messages". That means, of course,
   - that short error messages are censored by default.
   - IIS always returns error messages that are long
   - enough to make Internet Explorer happy. The
   - workaround is pretty simple: pad the error
   - message with a big comment like this to push it
   - over the five hundred and twelve bytes minimum.
   - Of course, that's exactly what you're reading
   - right now.
   -->